In African-Centred Management Education Professor Abdulai looks critically at the failings of management education in Africa and how that has impacted growth and development efforts especially at this critical stage in the continent’s positive growth and development trajectory. He concludes that Africa’s current positive economic growth cannot be sustained without a significant contribution from its human capital. He adds that the outstanding economic record of Asian economies in recent decades dramatically illustrates how important human capital is to growth. These countries lacking natural resources and importing practically all their energy requirements have grown rapidly by relying on a well-trained educated and conscientious workforce. Professor Abdulai believes that Africa too can sustain its current growth and development by effectively combining its abundant natural resources with its human capital to attain its economic development but this will require an African cadre of well-trained managers at the helm of both private and public sector institutions. For this to become a reality management education in Africa will have to play a significant role but the author argues that it cannot be effective by continually mimicking the West in the programmes it delivers. It must come up with innovative and relevant pedagogy that will address the special challenges that the continent faces and deliver an African-centred management education. As well as pointing to the failures of management education in Africa Abdulai offers suggestions as to how to make management education really contribute to the education of Africans in order to sustain current and future development.
Piracy-free
Assured Quality
Secure Transactions
*COD & Shipping Charges may apply on certain items.